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#101
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drill/tap in frames
On 7/12/2018 9:37 PM, AMuzi wrote:
One might argue that we make good hardware, software, armament and kit. One might also argue that arms sales are more political than economic so quality, price or performance may not even be factors when compared to arm-bending 'deals one cannot refuse' as it were. How political can arms sales possibly be? https://sputniknews.com/us/201807081...ell-old-tanks/ Being Canadian, they wouldn't want their surplus tanks used to hurt people or anything like that: They should follow Bob Hope's lead. Few people know it, but Hope made a killing buying and selling obsolete military equipment after WW2. He had the connections due to his volunteer work, and he was able to get lots of tanks, cannons, etc. for next to nothing. He turned them around, selling them profitably to VFW halls, little towns, etc. at prices that seemed great. They were bought for the war memorials that still stand today. Hope even used his TV shows and stage performances to do subliminal advertising. He was a pioneer at that. At every show, he promoted his business by singing "Tanks for the memories." It worked. -- - Frank Krygowski |
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#102
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drill/tap in frames
On Thu, 12 Jul 2018 20:37:07 -0500, AMuzi wrote:
On 7/12/2018 5:43 PM, John B. Slocomb wrote: On Thu, 12 Jul 2018 17:20:56 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 7/12/2018 12:50 PM, AMuzi wrote: Sometimes, the crowd looks to The Left while visionaries look Right: https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/defa...20nato%204.jpg Two proud parents waited for the middle school marching band to pass by during the town parade. Soon they saw all the children concentrating hard, blaring on their clarinets and trumpets, and marching left, right, left, right... Except for their own little boy, who was marching right, left, right, left. "Look, dear!" said the proud mother. "Everyone's out of step except our little Donnie!" One always wonders whether there will be a secondary effect of some of these actions. The U.S. is the largest exporter of arms in the world with $10 billion of exports last year. How much of the $10 B is procured by Nato? One might also not want to ignore the fact that NATO IS a neuclar power with 200 odd neuclar bombs stored in various places in Europe. One might argue that we make good hardware, software, armament and kit. One might also argue that arms sales are more political than economic so quality, price or performance may not even be factors when compared to arm-bending 'deals one cannot refuse' as it were. This is undoubtedly correct but if 10 billion is entering the economic system there is some justification for saying "what difference does it make where it comes from.... it is 10 billion! How political can arms sales possibly be? https://sputniknews.com/us/201807081...ell-old-tanks/ My experience has been that arms deals are generally either political or corrupt, or both. Some years ago we were quietly asked by the Indonesian A.F. if we could supply some bits and pieces for Huey helicopters. As soon as we placed the first order we were informed that the parts were unavailable (to us). Being Canadian, they wouldn't want their surplus tanks used to hurt people or anything like that: the list of potential buyers was rather short due to Canada's policy not to sell weapons to "problematic countries." https://globalnews.ca/news/4318852/c...orces-fizzles/ At least in the two wheeler world I really don't care about your personal morals once your charge card runs and your bike leaves my premises. -- Cheers, John B. |
#103
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drill/tap in frames
On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 00:10:02 +0200, Emanuel Berg
wrote: James wrote: Then you should definitely not just drill and tap the frame tube itself. Why not? The material is too thin. Is it more thick at the bottom of the bottom bracket shell and at the bottom-mid section of the down tube where I have seen this numerous times, and also the chainguard stays to the chainguard intersection? A bottom bracket is usually specified as 7 - 8 mm thick. -- Cheers, John B. |
#104
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drill/tap in frames
On Thu, 12 Jul 2018 23:19:23 -0400, Frank Krygowski
wrote: On 7/12/2018 9:37 PM, AMuzi wrote: One might argue that we make good hardware, software, armament and kit. One might also argue that arms sales are more political than economic so quality, price or performance may not even be factors when compared to arm-bending 'deals one cannot refuse' as it were. How political can arms sales possibly be? https://sputniknews.com/us/201807081...ell-old-tanks/ Being Canadian, they wouldn't want their surplus tanks used to hurt people or anything like that: They should follow Bob Hope's lead. Few people know it, but Hope made a killing buying and selling obsolete military equipment after WW2. He had the connections due to his volunteer work, and he was able to get lots of tanks, cannons, etc. for next to nothing. He turned them around, selling them profitably to VFW halls, little towns, etc. at prices that seemed great. They were bought for the war memorials that still stand today. And doing a good thing :-) In the 1945 period war surplus had almost literally no value at all. If one could turn it into money it was probably a patriotic act :-) Hope even used his TV shows and stage performances to do subliminal advertising. He was a pioneer at that. At every show, he promoted his business by singing "Tanks for the memories." It worked. -- Cheers, John B. |
#105
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drill/tap in frames
John B. Slocomb wrote:
Is it more thick at the bottom of the bottom bracket shell and at the bottom-mid section of the down tube where I have seen this numerous times, and also the chainguard stays to the chainguard intersection? A bottom bracket is usually specified as 7 - 8 mm thick. And the mid-bottom part of the down tube? The screws are interchangeable in size and length. Yesterday BTW I saw a second bike with the exact same configuration. The bracket is bent so it is round along the tube surface, but what holds it in its place seems to be a single M5 screw with a flat PZ2 head. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 |
#106
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drill/tap in frames
On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 12:18:26 +0200, Emanuel Berg
wrote: John B. Slocomb wrote: Is it more thick at the bottom of the bottom bracket shell and at the bottom-mid section of the down tube where I have seen this numerous times, and also the chainguard stays to the chainguard intersection? A bottom bracket is usually specified as 7 - 8 mm thick. And the mid-bottom part of the down tube? The screws are interchangeable in size and length. Well that depends. Probably on the cost and class of the bike. The down tube is pretty thin on most better class road bikes. Say Perhaps ..6 - .7 mm in wall thickness. Depending on whether it is butted, non butted, etc, Yesterday BTW I saw a second bike with the exact same configuration. The bracket is bent so it is round along the tube surface, but what holds it in its place seems to be a single M5 screw with a flat PZ2 head. Given that all the pedaling torque passes through the bottom bracket I'd doubt if a new bike would use a single screw to hold the BB onto the frame tubes. -- Cheers, John B. |
#107
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drill/tap in frames
John B. Slocomb wrote:
On Thu, 12 Jul 2018 23:19:23 -0400, Frank Krygowski wrote: On 7/12/2018 9:37 PM, AMuzi wrote: One might argue that we make good hardware, software, armament and kit. One might also argue that arms sales are more political than economic so quality, price or performance may not even be factors when compared to arm-bending 'deals one cannot refuse' as it were. How political can arms sales possibly be? https://sputniknews.com/us/201807081...ell-old-tanks/ Being Canadian, they wouldn't want their surplus tanks used to hurt people or anything like that: They should follow Bob Hope's lead. Few people know it, but Hope made a killing buying and selling obsolete military equipment after WW2. He had the connections due to his volunteer work, and he was able to get lots of tanks, cannons, etc. for next to nothing. He turned them around, selling them profitably to VFW halls, little towns, etc. at prices that seemed great. They were bought for the war memorials that still stand today. And doing a good thing :-) In the 1945 period war surplus had almost literally no value at all. If one could turn it into money it was probably a patriotic act :-) Hope even used his TV shows and stage performances to do subliminal advertising. He was a pioneer at that. At every show, he promoted his business by singing "Tanks for the memories." It worked. -- Cheers, John B. John, I suspect Frank's post was a very long, subtle joke. |
#108
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drill/tap in frames
John B. Slocomb wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 00:10:02 +0200, Emanuel Berg wrote: James wrote: Then you should definitely not just drill and tap the frame tube itself. Why not? The material is too thin. Is it more thick at the bottom of the bottom bracket shell and at the bottom-mid section of the down tube where I have seen this numerous times, and also the chainguard stays to the chainguard intersection? A bottom bracket is usually specified as 7 - 8 mm thick. -- Cheers, John B. Maybe 3-4 mm. Are you quoting the difference between the OD and ID, or the wall thickness? |
#109
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drill/tap in frames
John B. Slocomb wrote:
And the mid-bottom part of the down tube? The screws are interchangeable in size and length. Well that depends. Probably on the cost and class of the bike. The down tube is pretty thin on most better class road bikes. Say Perhaps .6 - .7 mm in wall thickness. Depending on whether it is butted, non butted, etc, These are not road bikes but ordinary standard steel frames for commuting, shopping, and everyday transport, say from the 80s. Yesterday BTW I saw a second bike with the exact same configuration. The bracket is bent so it is round along the tube surface, but what holds it in its place seems to be a single M5 screw with a flat PZ2 head. Given that all the pedaling torque passes through the bottom bracket I'd doubt if a new bike would use a single screw to hold the BB onto the frame tubes. What is held are two stays that then hold the chainguard. -- underground experts united http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573 |
#110
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drill/tap in frames
On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 12:49:33 +0000 (UTC), Ralph Barone
wrote: John B. Slocomb wrote: On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 00:10:02 +0200, Emanuel Berg wrote: James wrote: Then you should definitely not just drill and tap the frame tube itself. Why not? The material is too thin. Is it more thick at the bottom of the bottom bracket shell and at the bottom-mid section of the down tube where I have seen this numerous times, and also the chainguard stays to the chainguard intersection? A bottom bracket is usually specified as 7 - 8 mm thick. -- Cheers, John B. Maybe 3-4 mm. Are you quoting the difference between the OD and ID, or the wall thickness? I just looked at their catalog which red, for example: "LB100R - For 22.2mm Chainstays. 60.30x62.30x7\ufffd. No guides or cut-outs". or "LB109R - With Oval 30x17mm. Chainstays. Angles 60x64x7.30\ufffd. No guides or cut-outs." Given that the first two numbers were obviously length and breadth assumed the last was thickness. Not so? -- Cheers, John B. |
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